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Borneo campaign

Borneo campaign
Part of South West Pacific theatre of World War II

Australian troops advancing towards Brunei
Date1 May – 30 August 1945
Location
Result Allied victory[1]
Belligerents
Allies:
 United Kingdom
 Australia

 United States


 Netherlands
 Japan
Commanders and leaders
Douglas MacArthur[2]
Leslie Morshead
Thomas Kinkaid
Michiaki Kamada
Masao Baba
Strength
c. 74,000 32,000
Casualties and losses
2,100 casualties[3] 4,700 casualties[4]

The Borneo campaign or Second Battle of Borneo was the last major Allied campaign in the South West Pacific Area during World War II to liberate Japanese-held British Borneo and Dutch Borneo. Designated collectively as Operation Oboe, a series of amphibious assaults between 1 May and 21 July 1945 were conducted by the Australian I Corps, under Lieutenant-General Leslie Morshead, against Imperial Japanese forces who had been occupying the island since late 1941 – early 1942. The main Japanese formation on the island was the Thirty-Seventh Army under Lieutenant-General Masao Baba, while the naval garrison was commanded by Vice-Admiral Michiaki Kamada. The Australian ground forces were supported by US and other Allied air and naval forces, with the US providing the bulk of the shipping and logistic support necessary to conduct the operation. The campaign was initially planned to involve six stages, but eventually landings were undertaken at four locations: Tarakan, Labuan, North Borneo and Balikpapan. Guerilla operations were also carried out by Dayak tribesmen and small numbers of Allied personnel in the interior of the island. While major combat operations were concluded by mid-July, localised fighting continued throughout Borneo until the end of the war in August. Initially intended to secure vital airfields and port facilities to support future operations, preparatory bombardment resulted in heavy damage to the island's infrastructure, including its oil production facilities. As a result, the strategic benefits the Allies gained from the campaign were negligible.

Background

Prior to World War II, Borneo was divided between British Borneo, in the north of the island and Dutch Borneo in the south; the latter formed part of the Netherlands East Indies (NEI). As of 1941, the island's population was estimated to be 3 million. The great majority lived in small villages, with Borneo having less than a dozen towns. Borneo has a tropical climate and was mainly covered by dense jungle at the time of World War II. Most of the coastline was lined with mangroves or swamps.[5]

Borneo was strategically important during World War II. The European colonisers had developed oil fields and their holdings exported other raw materials. The island's location was also significant, as it sat across the main sea routes between north Asia, Malaya and the NEI. Despite this, Borneo was under-developed, and had few roads and only a single railroad. Most travel was by watercraft or narrow paths. The British and Dutch also stationed only small military forces in Borneo to protect their holdings.[5]

Borneo was rapidly conquered by the Japanese in the opening weeks of the Pacific War. The purpose of this operation was to capture the oilfields and guard the flanks of advances into Malaya and the NEI.[5][6] Japanese troops landed at Sarawak on 16 December 1941, where a single battalion of British Indian troops fought a delaying action over several weeks, damaging vital oil installations. Meanwhile, on 11 January 1942, Japanese troops landed on the island of Tarakan, while parachute troops carried out a drop on the Celebes the following day; the small Dutch garrison managed to destroy some of the infrastructure before eventually being overwhelmed.[7] The destruction of these facilities led to harsh reprisals against civilians, particularly at Balikpapan where between 80 and 100 Europeans were executed.[8][9]

In the aftermath, the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) administered the occupied British North Borneo and the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) was responsible for Dutch Borneo. The garrison forces on the island were very small until mid-1944.[10] During the occupation, the local population was subjected to harsh treatment. For example, on Tarakan large numbers of people were conscripted as labourers, the economy was disrupted, and food became increasingly scarce. In October 1943, an open revolt by local Dayak tribesmen and ethnic Chinese initiated the Jesselton revolt which was violently suppressed with hundreds being executed. In the aftermath, many more died from diseases and starvation as Japanese policies became even more restrictive on the local population.[11] Japanese forces conducted a number of other massacres during their occupation of Borneo.[12]

Planning

 
A map showing the progress of the Borneo campaign

The plans for the Allied attacks were known collectively as Operation Oboe.[13] The invasion of Borneo was the second stage of Operation Montclair,[1] which was aimed at destroying Imperial Japanese forces in, and re-occupying the NEI, Raj of Sarawak, Brunei, the colonies of Labuan and British North Borneo, and the southern Philippines.[14] Borneo in particular was considered at the time a strategic location for its natural resource; oil and rubber.[15] Tarakan was also seen to offer a forward airbase to support future operations in the region,[16] while Brunei Bay was intended to be used as naval base.[17] Planning for the operation began in late 1944 and early 1945 through the General Headquarters of General Douglas MacArthur's South West Pacific Area. As a result of the commitment of US forces to the recapture of the Philippines, the task of recapturing Borneo was allocated primarily to Australian ground forces.[18][19] By this time the Australian I Corps, the Australian Army's main striking force, had not engaged in combat for over a year. The corps had been assigned to MacArthur, but he had chosen to not use it in the Philippines despite the Australian Government pressing for this.[20]

The initial Allied plan comprised six stages: Operation Oboe 1 was to be an attack on Tarakan; Oboe 2 against Balikpapan; Oboe 3 against Banjarmasin; Oboe 4 against Surabaya or the capital of the NEI, Batavia (modern-day Jakarta); Oboe 5 against the eastern NEI; and Oboe 6 against British North Borneo (Sabah). In the end only the operations against Tarakan, Balikpapan and British North Borneo – at Labuan and Brunei Bay – took place.[21][22] These operations ultimately constituted the last campaigns of Australian forces in the war against Japan.[23] In the planning phase the commander of the Australian Military Forces, General Thomas Blamey recommended against the landing at Balikpapan, believing that it would serve no strategic purpose. After much consideration, the Australian Government agreed to provide forces for this operation at MacArthur's urging. Blamey was able to frustrate MacArthur's plans for Australian troops to make follow-on landings in Java by convincing Prime Minister John Curtin to withhold the 6th Division.[24] Prior to the main landings in British North Borneo the Allies undertook a series of reconnaissance operations, codenamed Agas (northern Borneo) and Semut (Sarawak); these operations also worked to arm, train and organise the local population to undertake guerilla warfare against the Japanese to support conventional operations.[25]

The Japanese military began to prepare for the defence of Borneo from mid-1944, as Allied forces rapidly advanced towards the island. IJA reinforcements were allocated to Borneo, but did not arrive until between September and November that year.[26] In late 1944 the Japanese command judged that Australian forces were likely to attack the Brunei area and then capture the west coast of Borneo as part of a campaign aimed at liberating Singapore. Accordingly, most of the IJA units in north-eastern Borneo were ordered to move overland to the west coast; this required them to undertake gruelling marches over rugged terrain.[27] Two other battalions were transferred from north-eastern Borneo by sea to south Borneo between February and March 1945.[28] After United States forces liberated key areas of the Philippines, which cut the rest of South-East Asia off from Japan, on 27 January 1945 the IJA's General Staff ordered the forces in this area to defend the territory they held and not expect reinforcements.[27]

Opposing forces

 
US Navy Landing Craft Infantry crowded with Australian soldiers prior to the landing at Labuan

The main Allied ground forces assigned to the campaign came from the Australian I Corps, under Lieutenant-General Leslie Morshead. The main elements of this force consisted of two infantry divisions: the 7th and 9th. For the operation, the Australian corps was assigned as a task force directly under MacArthur's command rather than as part of the Eighth Army, which was controlling operations in the Philippines.[29] Allied naval and air forces, centred on the U.S. 7th Fleet under Admiral Thomas Kinkaid,[30] the Australian First Tactical Air Force,[31] and the U.S. Thirteenth Air Force also played important roles in the campaign.[32] A small number of Dutch personnel also took part in the operations.[33] Over 74,000 Allied troops were assigned to the initial landings of the campaign.[34] The bulk of the logistic support was provided by the US, particularly provision of the shipping that was required to transport the vast amounts of troops, stores and equipment required for the operation.[35]

Allied forces were resisted by IJN and IJA forces in southern and eastern Borneo, under Vice-Admiral Michiaki Kamada, and in the north-west by the Thirty-Seventh Army,[Note 1] led by Lieutenant-General Masao Baba,[37] which was headquartered in Jesselton.[38] The main elements of the Thirty-Seventh Army were the 56th Independent Mixed Brigade (northern Borneo), 71st Independent Mixed Brigade (southern Borneo) and 25th Independent Mixed Regiment; these units had been raised in Japan during the second half of 1944 and arrived in Borneo late that year.[39][40] The IJN's 2nd Naval Guard Force was also stationed in Borneo. Allied intelligence assessed that there were about 32,000 Japanese troops in Borneo, with 15,000 of these being combat troops.[38] Most of the units which had been ordered from north-eastern Borneo to the west coast were still in transit when the Australian landings began and had been greatly weakened by the difficult conditions experienced during their cross-island march.[41] The transfers left only single battalions in place at Tarakan and Balikpapan.[28] Japanese air power in the region, except in Java and Sumatra, was ineffective.[38]

Battles

Tarakan

 
Australian infantrymen passing a Matilda tank in the interior of Tarakan

The campaign opened with Oboe 1, which consisted of a landing on the small island of Tarakan, off the north-east coast on 1 May 1945. This operation was undertaken to capture the island's airstrip so that it could be used to support the subsequent landings on the mainland of Borneo.[42] Using Australian-built MK III folboats, small parties of reconnaissance troops paddled into the Tarakan region to obtain useful information and observe the Djoeta oilfields prior to an invasion.[43]

The landing on Tarakan was assigned to the heavily reinforced 26th Brigade, under the command of Brigadier David Whitehead. This brigade's three infantry battalions were augmented with two battalions of pioneers as well as commandos and engineers. American amphibious engineers and a Dutch infantry company (made up of soldiers from Ambon Island) and civil affairs unit were also placed under Whitehead's command. Overall, the 26th Brigade had a strength of just under 12,000 troops.[44][45] The Australian assault was preceded by a heavy aerial bombardment commencing 12 April, and undertaken by RAAF and US aircraft operating from Morotai Island and the Philippines; these aircraft interdicted Japanese shipping, attacked airfields, reduced obstacles around the landing beaches and suppressed artillery and defensive positions;[46] in addition, a preliminary landing was undertaken on Sadau Island by a group of commandos and an artillery battery.[16] Naval assets assigned to provide fire support during the operation include three cruisers, seven destroyers and several landing craft fitted with rockets and mortars.[32] Three days prior to the assault, a force of minesweepers worked to clear the area of naval mines.[47]

During the main landing, the battery on Sadau Island provided fire support to the Australian engineers who were landed at Lingkas to clear obstacles on the landing beaches. Assault troops from the 2/23rd and 2/48th Infantry Battalions came ashore under the cover of a strong naval barrage. Initially, they encountered no opposition before they began to advance north towards Tarakan town. Opposition around Lingkas Hill was overcome and by the end of the first day a strong beachhead had been established. The brigade reserve, the 2/24th Infantry Battalion, was landed the next day as the advance towards the airfield continued. Japanese resistance grew, and the advance was hindered by large numbers of mines and booby traps, which had to be cleared by engineers and pioneers; however, finally, on 5 May the airfield was captured by the Australians. Meanwhile, operations continued into June as isolated pockets of Japanese resisted the Australians in tunnels and on high features across the island. The final major objective, Hill 90, was secured on 20 June, but small scale clashes continued after this. Ultimately, the airfield was so heavily damaged that it took eight weeks to repair, by which time the war was essentially over.[48][49] As a result, most historians, including the Australian official historian Gavin Long, believe that the invasion of Tarakan did not justify the casualties suffered by the Allied forces; these included 225 Australians killed and 669 wounded. Japanese casualties were even heavier, with 1,540 being killed and 252 captured.[50][51]

North Borneo

The landings in north-west Borneo had several goals. These included securing the Brunei Bay area for use as a naval base and capturing oil and rubber facilities. A total of 29,000 personnel were assigned to the operation, just over 1,000 of these were US and British personnel, while the rest were Australian. Almost 6,000 were air force personnel, while 18,000 were ground troops and 4,700 were base area personnel.[52] Major General George Wootten's 9th Division was the main element of this force, and consisted of two infantry brigades – the 20th and 24th; the division's third brigade – the 26th Brigade – had been detached for operations on Tarakan.[50] The troops were supported by large number of American and Australian warships and air units.[53] In preparation for the landing, a reconnaissance party including Sergeant Jack Wong Sue, was inserted into Kimanis Bay, British North Borneo, for close reconnaissance work using a Hoehn military folboat deployed from a Catalina aircraft.[43]

 
Australian soldiers disembarking from a US Navy LST at Labuan on 10 June 1945

Oboe 6 began on 10 June with simultaneous assaults by the 24th Brigade on the island of Labuan and the 20th Brigade on the coast of Brunei in the north-west of Borneo.[22][54] As Japanese forces were holding positions away from the coast, these landings were unopposed.[50] The 20th Brigade encountered little resistance. After the town of Brunei was secured on 13 June, the brigade continued its advance along the coast towards the south-west.[55] Its objective was the MiriLutong area, with the 2/17th Battalion moving by land while the 2/13th Battalion made an amphibious landing at Lutong on 20 June. The Japanese forces withdrew as the Australians advanced, and there was little fighting during these operations. Patrols into the interior made by the 20th Brigade with the assistance of local Dayaks into the interior were involved in several sharp engagements.[56]

While the 24th Brigade rapidly captured Labuan's airfield and town, it encountered sustained resistance from the Japanese garrison which was located in a well-defended stronghold.[50] After heavy casualties were sustained during the 2/28th Battalion's initial attack against this position on 16 June it was decided to subject the area to a sustained bombardment.[57] The battalion attacked again on 21 June with the support of tanks and rapidly defeated the Japanese forces.[58] The fighting on Labuan cost the 24th Brigade 34 killed and 93 wounded. The Australian soldiers counted 389 Japanese dead and took 11 prisoners.[59]

A week after the initial landing on Labuan, the Australians followed up with attacks on Japanese positions around Weston on the north-eastern part of Brunei Bay.[60][61] The Australians then pushed inland along the single track railway that ran from Weston towards the junction at Beaufort, 23 kilometres (14 mi) north-west of Brunei Bay,[62][63] and then on to Jesselton.[64] The heaviest fighting of the operations on the mainland took place on 27/28 June during the Battle of Beaufort, during which more than 100 Japanese defenders were killed.[62] After this engagement the 24th Brigade undertook limited further advances in order to push the Japanese forces into the hills;[65] the brigade's limit of exploitation was the Beaufort–Tenom railway and during this period the Australian commanders adopted a cautious approach to limit casualties. Nevertheless, clashes continued into August; on 3 August, the Japanese attempted to counterattack a position held by the 2/28th Battalion. At least 11 Japanese were killed in the fighting, for the loss of one Australian.[66]

The operations in North Borneo also involved a substantial civil affairs effort to assist the liberated civilian population; this was the largest such task undertaken by Australian forces during World War II. The 9th Division was heavily involved in providing aid to civilians and rebuilding houses and infrastructure which had been destroyed by the pre-invasion bombardments and subsequent fighting.[67]

Guerilla warfare

 
Dayak men armed with Japanese rifles in Brunei during June 1945 before returning to their villages in the interior

The conventional operations on British North Borneo were accompanied by a guerilla warfare campaign organised by Special Operations Australia (SOA). This involved two operations; Operation Agas in British North Borneo and Operation Semut in Sarawak.[68] These operations succeeded the unsuccessful Operation Python which had been undertaken between October 1943 and January 1944.[25]

Five SOA parties were inserted in North Borneo between March and July 1945. The Agas 1 and 2 parties established networks of agents and guerrillas in north-western Borneo. The Agas 4 and 5 parties were landed on the east coast of Borneo, and achieved little. The Agas 3 party investigated the Ranau area on the request of I Corps. The results of Operation Agas were mixed; its parties established control over their areas of operation, provided intelligence of variable quality and killed less than 100 Japanese.[69]

As part of Operation Semut over 100 Allied personnel organised into four parties were inserted by air into Sarawak from March 1945. Most of these personnel were Australian. The Semut parties were tasked with collecting intelligence and establishing guerilla forces. The inhabitants of Sarawak's interior, who were known as Dayaks, enthusiastically joined the guerilla groups and SOA personnel led small private armies.[70] No. 200 Flight RAAF and the Royal Australian Navy's Snake-class junks played important roles in this campaign by inserting SOA personnel and supplies.[71]

The guerilla forces launched attacks to gain control of the interior of Sarawak while the 9th Division focused on the coastal area, the oilfields, plantations and the ports in North Borneo.[72] The guerillas operated from patrol bases around Balai, Ridan and Marudi, as well as in the mountains, along several key waterways including the Pandaruan and Limbang Rivers, and along the railway that ran between Beaufort and Tenom. They sought to disrupt the Japanese troops' freedom of movement and interdicted forces as they withdrew from the main combat zone.[73] The RAAF flew air strikes to support the lightly armed guerillas, who at times had to evade better-armed Japanese units.[72] The campaign was highly successful, and it is estimated that over 1,800 Japanese were killed in north Borneo through guerilla actions.[73][74]

Balikpapan

The attention of the Allies then switched back to the central east coast, with Oboe 2. The last major amphibious assault of World War II was at Balikpapan on 1 July 1945.[75] The landing was preceded by a heavy aerial bombardment over the course of 20 days, while minesweepers worked to clear the area for 15 days,[76] establishing safe lanes for the invasion fleet to pass and clearing proposed anchorages. These operations were undertaken inside the range of Japanese coastal guns; to protect the minesweepers, naval gunfire and aerial bombardment was used to suppress and neutralise the Japanese guns. Due to the unavailability of the Tarakan airfield, air support for the operation was provided by RAAF and US units based in the southern Philippines.[77] Three minesweepers were lost during the clearance operations.[78]

 
Members of the 7th Division at Balikpapan

The invasion fleet sailed from Morotai Island on 26 June, arriving off Balikpapan on 29 June. The landing area was then subjected to over 45,000 rounds of preparatory fire from the Australian, US and Dutch warships supporting the landing.[76] A deception plan was enacted to draw Japanese attention towards Manggar, with the Australians undertaking pre-landing operations and spreading disinformation.[79] US underwater demolition teams cleared obstacles along the landing beach, as well as off Manggar, as part of the deception plan.[78] For the landing operation, a total of 33,000 personnel were assigned, 21,000 of which were from the Australian 7th Division, under the command of Major General Edward Milford.[80] This formation consisted of three brigades – the 18th, 21st and 25th – fighting together as a formation for the first time during the war. Three beaches were chosen for the landing on the southern coast between Klandasan in the east and Stalkoedo in the west;[81] the initial assault was undertaken by three infantry battalions: the 2/10th on the extreme left, the 2/12th in the centre and the 2/27th Battalion on the right.[82] The troops were landed at the wrong location as smoke from the pre-landing bombardment made navigation difficult,[83][78] but the landing was unopposed and a beachhead was quickly established as follow on forces arrived.[82]

Operating on the left, the 18th Brigade fought to capture several high features around Klandasan and to gain control of the town and secure the harbour and port facilities in Balikpapan north-west of the landing beaches, while the 21st Brigade landed on the right, tasked with advancing east towards several Japanese airfields at Sepinggang and Manggar, along the main coastal road. The 25th Brigade was held in reserve, but after landing on 2 July, pushed inland towards Batuchampar, 10 miles (16 km) from the initial landing site.[80] Balikpapan town and the port were captured on 3 July, but mopping up continued into 4 July.[82] Along the coast, the 21st Brigade crossed the Batakan Ketjil River, where it was held up on 3 July by strong Japanese resistance, which was overcome with naval gunfire support. The following day, after crossing the Manggar Besar, the brigade came up against even stronger Japanese opposition, supported by coastal artillery and mortars defending the airfield; despite landing tanks around the river, the Australians were held up for several more days until some of the guns were captured, and heavy air strikes overwhelmed the defenders.[80][84]

Meanwhile, on 5 July, one of the 18th Brigade's infantry battalions – the 2/9th – along with the 2/1st Pioneer Battalion,[85] was landed at Panadjam to clear the western shore of Japanese artillery, prior to the Allies opening the port. Against only limited opposition, the area around Panadjam was cleared within two days. Meanwhile, the airfields were secured by 9 July, but Japanese resistance was strong, utilising delaying tactics including booby traps, mines, sniping and small-scale raids. Strong resistance was met around Batuchampar where a Japanese battalion had established a stronghold, while others fought resolutely in tunnels around Manggar.[86][87] Australian engineers were heavily tasked, working to clear over 8,000 mines and booby traps, as well as destroying over 100 tunnels.[78]

Once Manggar airfield was secured, the 21st Brigade continued their advance towards Sambodja.[85] Moving inland along a north-east road dubbed the "Milford Highway" by the Australians, the 25th Brigade advanced to contact with the Japanese rearguard, which was reduced with artillery support and then outflanked, triggering a withdrawal to a secondary position 3 miles (4.8 km) back on 9 July. Air strikes and artillery helped reduce this position, while infantry worked to surround the position; this was not fully achieved and by the evening of 21/22 July, the remaining defenders withdrew further inland.[84] Opposition in these areas was largely overcome by the end of July, but mopping-up operations around Balikpapan continued until the end of the war in August as Japanese troops withdrew to the rough high ground further inland.[86][87] Operations to secure Balikpapan cost the Australians 229 killed and 634 wounded, while Japanese losses were placed at 2,032 killed. A further 63 were captured.[88]

Aftermath

 
Part of the Labuan War Cemetery in 2011

In the aftermath of the campaign, Australian personnel remained in Borneo until late 1945 to restore civilian administration, oversee reconstruction efforts, supervising the surrender of Japanese troops, and liberating former Allied prisoners of war held in camps around Borneo.[89] It has been claimed that Australian forces near Beaufort encouraged local fighters to massacre surrendered Japanese troops after the war in revenge for the Sandakan Death Marches, with almost 6,000 Japanese being killed. The historian Ooi Keat Gin states though that no documentary evidence supports these claims.[90]

The amphibious operations undertaken by Australian forces throughout the Borneo campaign were, according to the historian Eustace Keogh the "outstanding feature" of the campaign, and represented the largest such operations that the Australians undertook during the war. They required vast amounts of naval and air support, as well as complex planning and co-operation between air, land and naval forces from several nations. A significant amount of time and resources were invested prior to the operation to train the forces assigned.[91] The historian Peter Dennis assesses that the operations were of "doubtful value strategically...[but]...they were skillfully conducted".[16] Casualties during the campaign on the Allied side amounted to about 2,100,[3] while the Japanese suffered about 4,700 casualties.[4] A considerable number of civilians were killed or wounded; for instance, the pre-invasion bombardment of Tarakan resulted in least 100 civilian casualties.[92]

Despite the success of the Allied landings, because of the strategic situation, the Borneo campaign was criticised in Australia at the time and in subsequent years, as pointless or a "waste" of the lives of soldiers,[93] especially following the first operation in Tarakan.[94] In assessing the necessity of the campaign, historians such as Max Hastings have said that attacking these forces, already cut off from Japan, was a waste of resources. According to Hastings, "Any rational strategic judgment would have left them to their own devices screened by token allied forces until their nation's defeat enforced their surrender".[95] It has been argued that the campaign did, however, achieve a number of objectives, such as increasing the isolation of significant Japanese forces occupying the main part of the NEI, capturing major oil supplies, and freeing Allied prisoners of war, who were being held in increasingly worse conditions in the Sandakan camp and Batu Lintang camp.[96][97]

Notes

  1. ^ A Japanese 'army' of World War II was equivalent to an Allied corps, and usually commanded between two and four divisions.[36]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Ooi 2010, p. 204.
  2. ^ Dean 2018.
  3. ^ a b Australian War Memorial London.
  4. ^ a b Bōei Kenshūjo 1966.
  5. ^ a b c Kirby 2004, p. 221.
  6. ^ Shindo 2016, p. 67.
  7. ^ Costello 2009, pp. 166, 189.
  8. ^ Costello 2009, p. 216.
  9. ^ Advocate 7 December 1946, p. 1.
  10. ^ Shindo 2016, pp. 67–68.
  11. ^ Long 1963, p. 454.
  12. ^ Ooi 2011, p. 86.
  13. ^ Hastings & Stanley 2016, pp. 218–279.
  14. ^ Hastings & Stanley 2016, p. 279.
  15. ^ Sandler 2001, p. 180.
  16. ^ a b c Dennis 1995, p. 111.
  17. ^ Keogh 1965, p. 444.
  18. ^ Keogh 1965, pp. 429–430.
  19. ^ Dennis 1995, pp. 109–111.
  20. ^ Horner 2016, pp. 16–18, 21.
  21. ^ Keogh 1965, pp. 432–433.
  22. ^ a b Converse 2011, p. 17.
  23. ^ Long 1963, p. 49.
  24. ^ Horner 2016, pp. 21–23.
  25. ^ a b Ooi 2002.
  26. ^ Shindo 2016, pp. 68–70.
  27. ^ a b Shindo 2016, p. 71.
  28. ^ a b Shindo 2016, p. 72.
  29. ^ Keogh 1965, p. 433.
  30. ^ Hoyt 1989, pp. 191–198.
  31. ^ Dennis 1995, p. 113.
  32. ^ a b Keogh 1965, p. 438.
  33. ^ Costello 2009, p. 573.
  34. ^ Coulthard-Clark 1998, pp. 251–254.
  35. ^ Crawley 2014, p. 33.
  36. ^ Rottman 2005, p. 23.
  37. ^ Bullard 2016, p. 43.
  38. ^ a b c Keogh 1965, p. 434.
  39. ^ Shindo 2016, p. 70.
  40. ^ Ness 2014, pp. 187, 190, 209.
  41. ^ Shindo 2016, pp. 71, 73.
  42. ^ Coulthard-Clark 2001, p. 251.
  43. ^ a b Hoehn 2011, p. 71.
  44. ^ Long 1973, pp. 447–448.
  45. ^ Stanley 1997, p. 42.
  46. ^ Keogh 1965, pp. 438–439.
  47. ^ MacArthur 1994, pp. 373–374.
  48. ^ Coulthard-Clark 1998, pp. 251–252.
  49. ^ Dennis 1995, pp. 111–112.
  50. ^ a b c d Coulthard-Clark 2001, p. 252.
  51. ^ Long 1973, p. 453.
  52. ^ Long 1963, p. 458.
  53. ^ Long 1973, p. 454.
  54. ^ Coulthard-Clark 1998, p. 252.
  55. ^ Coulthard-Clark 2001, p. 253.
  56. ^ Long 1973, pp. 459–461.
  57. ^ Long 1963, p. 473.
  58. ^ Long 1973, pp. 458–459.
  59. ^ Long 1963, p. 475.
  60. ^ Coulthard-Clark 1998, pp. 252–253.
  61. ^ Ministry of Defence 1995, p. 175.
  62. ^ a b Coulthard-Clark 1998, p. 253.
  63. ^ MacArthur 1994, p. 379.
  64. ^ MacArthur 1994, pp. 378–379.
  65. ^ Long 1973, p. 459.
  66. ^ Long 1963, p. 483.
  67. ^ Long 1973, p. 461.
  68. ^ Pratten 2016a, pp. 307–308.
  69. ^ Pratten 2016a, p. 307.
  70. ^ Pratten 2016a, p. 308.
  71. ^ Truscott 2000, p. 20.
  72. ^ a b Pratten 2016a, p. 309.
  73. ^ a b Dennis 1995, p. 114.
  74. ^ Pratten 2016a, p. 310.
  75. ^ Pfennigwerth 2009, p. 166.
  76. ^ a b MacArthur 1994, pp. 379–380.
  77. ^ Keogh 1965, pp. 458–459.
  78. ^ a b c d Dennis 1995, p. 115.
  79. ^ Keogh 1965, p. 459.
  80. ^ a b c Coulthard-Clark 1998, p. 254.
  81. ^ Keogh 1965, pp. 456–457.
  82. ^ a b c Keogh 1965, p. 462.
  83. ^ Pratten 2016b, p. 328.
  84. ^ a b Keogh 1965, p. 463.
  85. ^ a b McKenzie-Smith 2018, p. 2089.
  86. ^ a b Dennis 1995, pp. 114–116.
  87. ^ a b Coulthard-Clark 1998, pp. 254–255.
  88. ^ Long 1963, p. 545.
  89. ^ Long 1963, pp. 496, 561–563.
  90. ^ Ooi 2011, pp. 137–138.
  91. ^ Keogh 1965, pp. 463–464.
  92. ^ Hastings & Stanley 2016, p. 281.
  93. ^ Grey 2008, p. 190.
  94. ^ Hastings.
  95. ^ Hastings 2007, p. 368.
  96. ^ Tanaka 2017, p. 27.
  97. ^ Mikaberidze 2018, p. 27.

References

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  • Hastings, Tony; Stanley, Peter (2016). "'To capture Tarakan': Was Operation Oboe 1 Unnecessary?". In Dean, Peter J. (ed.). Australia 1944–45. Port Melbourne, Victoria: Cambridge University Press. pp. 278–297. ISBN 978-1-10708-346-2.
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  • Ooi, Keat Gin (2002). "Prelude to Invasion: Covert Operations Before the Re-occupation of Northwest Borneo, 1944–45". Journal of the Australian War Memorial. Canberra: Australian War Memorial (37). ISSN 1327-0141. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  • Pfennigwerth, Ian (2009). Royal Australian Navy & MacArthur. Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 978-1-922013-21-7.
  • Pratten, Garth (2016a). "'Unique in the History of the AIF': Operations in British Borneo". In Dean, Peter J. (ed.). Australia 1944–45: Victory in the Pacific. Port Melbourne, Victoria: Cambridge University Press. pp. 298–319. ISBN 978-1-107-08346-2.
  • Pratten, Garth (2016b). "'Calling the Tune': Australian and Allied Operations at Balikpapan". In Dean, Peter J. (ed.). Australia 1944–45: Victory in the Pacific. Port Melbourne, Victoria: Cambridge University Press. pp. 320–340. ISBN 978-1-107-08346-2.
  • Rottman, Gordon L. (2005). Japanese Army in World War II: Conquest of the Pacific 1941-42. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84176-789-5.
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  • Shindo, Hiroyuki (2016). "Holding on to the Finish: The Japanese Army in the South and South West Pacific 1944–45". In Dean, Peter J. (ed.). Australia 1944–45: Victory in the Pacific. Port Melbourne, Victoria: Cambridge University Press. pp. 51–76. ISBN 978-1-107-08346-2.
  • Stanley, Peter (1997). Tarakan: An Australian Tragedy. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86448-278-8.
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  • Truscott, Jim (2000). "Voices from Borneo: The Japanese War" (PDF). Army Journal: The Professional Journal of the Australian Army: 13–23. OCLC 173394492.

External links

  • Borneo campaign at AWM London
  • Borneo Campaign at WW2 Database
  • Pratten, Garth (21 October 2019). "Naik Sungai: The river war in Borneo". Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs. Australian National University.

borneo, campaign, this, article, about, 1945, allied, campaign, borneo, 1941, japanese, conquest, island, battle, borneo, 1941, 1942, battle, tarakan, 1942, battle, balikpapan, 1942, part, south, west, pacific, theatre, world, iiaustralian, troops, advancing, . This article is about the 1945 Allied campaign in Borneo For the 1941 42 Japanese conquest of the island see Battle of Borneo 1941 1942 Battle of Tarakan 1942 and Battle of Balikpapan 1942 Borneo campaignPart of South West Pacific theatre of World War IIAustralian troops advancing towards BruneiDate1 May 30 August 1945LocationBritish Borneo and Dutch BorneoResultAllied victory 1 BelligerentsAllies United Kingdom North Borneo Australia United States Netherlands Dutch East Indies JapanCommanders and leadersDouglas MacArthur 2 Leslie Morshead Thomas KinkaidMichiaki Kamada Masao BabaStrengthc 74 00032 000Casualties and losses2 100 casualties 3 4 700 casualties 4 The Borneo campaign or Second Battle of Borneo was the last major Allied campaign in the South West Pacific Area during World War II to liberate Japanese held British Borneo and Dutch Borneo Designated collectively as Operation Oboe a series of amphibious assaults between 1 May and 21 July 1945 were conducted by the Australian I Corps under Lieutenant General Leslie Morshead against Imperial Japanese forces who had been occupying the island since late 1941 early 1942 The main Japanese formation on the island was the Thirty Seventh Army under Lieutenant General Masao Baba while the naval garrison was commanded by Vice Admiral Michiaki Kamada The Australian ground forces were supported by US and other Allied air and naval forces with the US providing the bulk of the shipping and logistic support necessary to conduct the operation The campaign was initially planned to involve six stages but eventually landings were undertaken at four locations Tarakan Labuan North Borneo and Balikpapan Guerilla operations were also carried out by Dayak tribesmen and small numbers of Allied personnel in the interior of the island While major combat operations were concluded by mid July localised fighting continued throughout Borneo until the end of the war in August Initially intended to secure vital airfields and port facilities to support future operations preparatory bombardment resulted in heavy damage to the island s infrastructure including its oil production facilities As a result the strategic benefits the Allies gained from the campaign were negligible Contents 1 Background 2 Planning 3 Opposing forces 4 Battles 4 1 Tarakan 4 2 North Borneo 4 3 Guerilla warfare 4 4 Balikpapan 5 Aftermath 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 External linksBackground EditPrior to World War II Borneo was divided between British Borneo in the north of the island and Dutch Borneo in the south the latter formed part of the Netherlands East Indies NEI As of 1941 the island s population was estimated to be 3 million The great majority lived in small villages with Borneo having less than a dozen towns Borneo has a tropical climate and was mainly covered by dense jungle at the time of World War II Most of the coastline was lined with mangroves or swamps 5 Borneo was strategically important during World War II The European colonisers had developed oil fields and their holdings exported other raw materials The island s location was also significant as it sat across the main sea routes between north Asia Malaya and the NEI Despite this Borneo was under developed and had few roads and only a single railroad Most travel was by watercraft or narrow paths The British and Dutch also stationed only small military forces in Borneo to protect their holdings 5 Borneo was rapidly conquered by the Japanese in the opening weeks of the Pacific War The purpose of this operation was to capture the oilfields and guard the flanks of advances into Malaya and the NEI 5 6 Japanese troops landed at Sarawak on 16 December 1941 where a single battalion of British Indian troops fought a delaying action over several weeks damaging vital oil installations Meanwhile on 11 January 1942 Japanese troops landed on the island of Tarakan while parachute troops carried out a drop on the Celebes the following day the small Dutch garrison managed to destroy some of the infrastructure before eventually being overwhelmed 7 The destruction of these facilities led to harsh reprisals against civilians particularly at Balikpapan where between 80 and 100 Europeans were executed 8 9 In the aftermath the Imperial Japanese Army IJA administered the occupied British North Borneo and the Imperial Japanese Navy IJN was responsible for Dutch Borneo The garrison forces on the island were very small until mid 1944 10 During the occupation the local population was subjected to harsh treatment For example on Tarakan large numbers of people were conscripted as labourers the economy was disrupted and food became increasingly scarce In October 1943 an open revolt by local Dayak tribesmen and ethnic Chinese initiated the Jesselton revolt which was violently suppressed with hundreds being executed In the aftermath many more died from diseases and starvation as Japanese policies became even more restrictive on the local population 11 Japanese forces conducted a number of other massacres during their occupation of Borneo 12 Planning Edit A map showing the progress of the Borneo campaign The plans for the Allied attacks were known collectively as Operation Oboe 13 The invasion of Borneo was the second stage of Operation Montclair 1 which was aimed at destroying Imperial Japanese forces in and re occupying the NEI Raj of Sarawak Brunei the colonies of Labuan and British North Borneo and the southern Philippines 14 Borneo in particular was considered at the time a strategic location for its natural resource oil and rubber 15 Tarakan was also seen to offer a forward airbase to support future operations in the region 16 while Brunei Bay was intended to be used as naval base 17 Planning for the operation began in late 1944 and early 1945 through the General Headquarters of General Douglas MacArthur s South West Pacific Area As a result of the commitment of US forces to the recapture of the Philippines the task of recapturing Borneo was allocated primarily to Australian ground forces 18 19 By this time the Australian I Corps the Australian Army s main striking force had not engaged in combat for over a year The corps had been assigned to MacArthur but he had chosen to not use it in the Philippines despite the Australian Government pressing for this 20 The initial Allied plan comprised six stages Operation Oboe 1 was to be an attack on Tarakan Oboe 2 against Balikpapan Oboe 3 against Banjarmasin Oboe 4 against Surabaya or the capital of the NEI Batavia modern day Jakarta Oboe 5 against the eastern NEI and Oboe 6 against British North Borneo Sabah In the end only the operations against Tarakan Balikpapan and British North Borneo at Labuan and Brunei Bay took place 21 22 These operations ultimately constituted the last campaigns of Australian forces in the war against Japan 23 In the planning phase the commander of the Australian Military Forces General Thomas Blamey recommended against the landing at Balikpapan believing that it would serve no strategic purpose After much consideration the Australian Government agreed to provide forces for this operation at MacArthur s urging Blamey was able to frustrate MacArthur s plans for Australian troops to make follow on landings in Java by convincing Prime Minister John Curtin to withhold the 6th Division 24 Prior to the main landings in British North Borneo the Allies undertook a series of reconnaissance operations codenamed Agas northern Borneo and Semut Sarawak these operations also worked to arm train and organise the local population to undertake guerilla warfare against the Japanese to support conventional operations 25 The Japanese military began to prepare for the defence of Borneo from mid 1944 as Allied forces rapidly advanced towards the island IJA reinforcements were allocated to Borneo but did not arrive until between September and November that year 26 In late 1944 the Japanese command judged that Australian forces were likely to attack the Brunei area and then capture the west coast of Borneo as part of a campaign aimed at liberating Singapore Accordingly most of the IJA units in north eastern Borneo were ordered to move overland to the west coast this required them to undertake gruelling marches over rugged terrain 27 Two other battalions were transferred from north eastern Borneo by sea to south Borneo between February and March 1945 28 After United States forces liberated key areas of the Philippines which cut the rest of South East Asia off from Japan on 27 January 1945 the IJA s General Staff ordered the forces in this area to defend the territory they held and not expect reinforcements 27 Opposing forces Edit US Navy Landing Craft Infantry crowded with Australian soldiers prior to the landing at Labuan See also Borneo Campaign 1945 order of battle The main Allied ground forces assigned to the campaign came from the Australian I Corps under Lieutenant General Leslie Morshead The main elements of this force consisted of two infantry divisions the 7th and 9th For the operation the Australian corps was assigned as a task force directly under MacArthur s command rather than as part of the Eighth Army which was controlling operations in the Philippines 29 Allied naval and air forces centred on the U S 7th Fleet under Admiral Thomas Kinkaid 30 the Australian First Tactical Air Force 31 and the U S Thirteenth Air Force also played important roles in the campaign 32 A small number of Dutch personnel also took part in the operations 33 Over 74 000 Allied troops were assigned to the initial landings of the campaign 34 The bulk of the logistic support was provided by the US particularly provision of the shipping that was required to transport the vast amounts of troops stores and equipment required for the operation 35 Allied forces were resisted by IJN and IJA forces in southern and eastern Borneo under Vice Admiral Michiaki Kamada and in the north west by the Thirty Seventh Army Note 1 led by Lieutenant General Masao Baba 37 which was headquartered in Jesselton 38 The main elements of the Thirty Seventh Army were the 56th Independent Mixed Brigade northern Borneo 71st Independent Mixed Brigade southern Borneo and 25th Independent Mixed Regiment these units had been raised in Japan during the second half of 1944 and arrived in Borneo late that year 39 40 The IJN s 2nd Naval Guard Force was also stationed in Borneo Allied intelligence assessed that there were about 32 000 Japanese troops in Borneo with 15 000 of these being combat troops 38 Most of the units which had been ordered from north eastern Borneo to the west coast were still in transit when the Australian landings began and had been greatly weakened by the difficult conditions experienced during their cross island march 41 The transfers left only single battalions in place at Tarakan and Balikpapan 28 Japanese air power in the region except in Java and Sumatra was ineffective 38 Battles EditTarakan Edit Australian infantrymen passing a Matilda tank in the interior of Tarakan Main article Battle of Tarakan 1945 The campaign opened with Oboe 1 which consisted of a landing on the small island of Tarakan off the north east coast on 1 May 1945 This operation was undertaken to capture the island s airstrip so that it could be used to support the subsequent landings on the mainland of Borneo 42 Using Australian built MK III folboats small parties of reconnaissance troops paddled into the Tarakan region to obtain useful information and observe the Djoeta oilfields prior to an invasion 43 The landing on Tarakan was assigned to the heavily reinforced 26th Brigade under the command of Brigadier David Whitehead This brigade s three infantry battalions were augmented with two battalions of pioneers as well as commandos and engineers American amphibious engineers and a Dutch infantry company made up of soldiers from Ambon Island and civil affairs unit were also placed under Whitehead s command Overall the 26th Brigade had a strength of just under 12 000 troops 44 45 The Australian assault was preceded by a heavy aerial bombardment commencing 12 April and undertaken by RAAF and US aircraft operating from Morotai Island and the Philippines these aircraft interdicted Japanese shipping attacked airfields reduced obstacles around the landing beaches and suppressed artillery and defensive positions 46 in addition a preliminary landing was undertaken on Sadau Island by a group of commandos and an artillery battery 16 Naval assets assigned to provide fire support during the operation include three cruisers seven destroyers and several landing craft fitted with rockets and mortars 32 Three days prior to the assault a force of minesweepers worked to clear the area of naval mines 47 During the main landing the battery on Sadau Island provided fire support to the Australian engineers who were landed at Lingkas to clear obstacles on the landing beaches Assault troops from the 2 23rd and 2 48th Infantry Battalions came ashore under the cover of a strong naval barrage Initially they encountered no opposition before they began to advance north towards Tarakan town Opposition around Lingkas Hill was overcome and by the end of the first day a strong beachhead had been established The brigade reserve the 2 24th Infantry Battalion was landed the next day as the advance towards the airfield continued Japanese resistance grew and the advance was hindered by large numbers of mines and booby traps which had to be cleared by engineers and pioneers however finally on 5 May the airfield was captured by the Australians Meanwhile operations continued into June as isolated pockets of Japanese resisted the Australians in tunnels and on high features across the island The final major objective Hill 90 was secured on 20 June but small scale clashes continued after this Ultimately the airfield was so heavily damaged that it took eight weeks to repair by which time the war was essentially over 48 49 As a result most historians including the Australian official historian Gavin Long believe that the invasion of Tarakan did not justify the casualties suffered by the Allied forces these included 225 Australians killed and 669 wounded Japanese casualties were even heavier with 1 540 being killed and 252 captured 50 51 North Borneo Edit Main articles Battle of North Borneo and Battle of Labuan The landings in north west Borneo had several goals These included securing the Brunei Bay area for use as a naval base and capturing oil and rubber facilities A total of 29 000 personnel were assigned to the operation just over 1 000 of these were US and British personnel while the rest were Australian Almost 6 000 were air force personnel while 18 000 were ground troops and 4 700 were base area personnel 52 Major General George Wootten s 9th Division was the main element of this force and consisted of two infantry brigades the 20th and 24th the division s third brigade the 26th Brigade had been detached for operations on Tarakan 50 The troops were supported by large number of American and Australian warships and air units 53 In preparation for the landing a reconnaissance party including Sergeant Jack Wong Sue was inserted into Kimanis Bay British North Borneo for close reconnaissance work using a Hoehn military folboat deployed from a Catalina aircraft 43 Australian soldiers disembarking from a US Navy LST at Labuan on 10 June 1945 Oboe 6 began on 10 June with simultaneous assaults by the 24th Brigade on the island of Labuan and the 20th Brigade on the coast of Brunei in the north west of Borneo 22 54 As Japanese forces were holding positions away from the coast these landings were unopposed 50 The 20th Brigade encountered little resistance After the town of Brunei was secured on 13 June the brigade continued its advance along the coast towards the south west 55 Its objective was the Miri Lutong area with the 2 17th Battalion moving by land while the 2 13th Battalion made an amphibious landing at Lutong on 20 June The Japanese forces withdrew as the Australians advanced and there was little fighting during these operations Patrols into the interior made by the 20th Brigade with the assistance of local Dayaks into the interior were involved in several sharp engagements 56 While the 24th Brigade rapidly captured Labuan s airfield and town it encountered sustained resistance from the Japanese garrison which was located in a well defended stronghold 50 After heavy casualties were sustained during the 2 28th Battalion s initial attack against this position on 16 June it was decided to subject the area to a sustained bombardment 57 The battalion attacked again on 21 June with the support of tanks and rapidly defeated the Japanese forces 58 The fighting on Labuan cost the 24th Brigade 34 killed and 93 wounded The Australian soldiers counted 389 Japanese dead and took 11 prisoners 59 A week after the initial landing on Labuan the Australians followed up with attacks on Japanese positions around Weston on the north eastern part of Brunei Bay 60 61 The Australians then pushed inland along the single track railway that ran from Weston towards the junction at Beaufort 23 kilometres 14 mi north west of Brunei Bay 62 63 and then on to Jesselton 64 The heaviest fighting of the operations on the mainland took place on 27 28 June during the Battle of Beaufort during which more than 100 Japanese defenders were killed 62 After this engagement the 24th Brigade undertook limited further advances in order to push the Japanese forces into the hills 65 the brigade s limit of exploitation was the Beaufort Tenom railway and during this period the Australian commanders adopted a cautious approach to limit casualties Nevertheless clashes continued into August on 3 August the Japanese attempted to counterattack a position held by the 2 28th Battalion At least 11 Japanese were killed in the fighting for the loss of one Australian 66 The operations in North Borneo also involved a substantial civil affairs effort to assist the liberated civilian population this was the largest such task undertaken by Australian forces during World War II The 9th Division was heavily involved in providing aid to civilians and rebuilding houses and infrastructure which had been destroyed by the pre invasion bombardments and subsequent fighting 67 Guerilla warfare Edit Dayak men armed with Japanese rifles in Brunei during June 1945 before returning to their villages in the interior The conventional operations on British North Borneo were accompanied by a guerilla warfare campaign organised by Special Operations Australia SOA This involved two operations Operation Agas in British North Borneo and Operation Semut in Sarawak 68 These operations succeeded the unsuccessful Operation Python which had been undertaken between October 1943 and January 1944 25 Five SOA parties were inserted in North Borneo between March and July 1945 The Agas 1 and 2 parties established networks of agents and guerrillas in north western Borneo The Agas 4 and 5 parties were landed on the east coast of Borneo and achieved little The Agas 3 party investigated the Ranau area on the request of I Corps The results of Operation Agas were mixed its parties established control over their areas of operation provided intelligence of variable quality and killed less than 100 Japanese 69 As part of Operation Semut over 100 Allied personnel organised into four parties were inserted by air into Sarawak from March 1945 Most of these personnel were Australian The Semut parties were tasked with collecting intelligence and establishing guerilla forces The inhabitants of Sarawak s interior who were known as Dayaks enthusiastically joined the guerilla groups and SOA personnel led small private armies 70 No 200 Flight RAAF and the Royal Australian Navy s Snake class junks played important roles in this campaign by inserting SOA personnel and supplies 71 The guerilla forces launched attacks to gain control of the interior of Sarawak while the 9th Division focused on the coastal area the oilfields plantations and the ports in North Borneo 72 The guerillas operated from patrol bases around Balai Ridan and Marudi as well as in the mountains along several key waterways including the Pandaruan and Limbang Rivers and along the railway that ran between Beaufort and Tenom They sought to disrupt the Japanese troops freedom of movement and interdicted forces as they withdrew from the main combat zone 73 The RAAF flew air strikes to support the lightly armed guerillas who at times had to evade better armed Japanese units 72 The campaign was highly successful and it is estimated that over 1 800 Japanese were killed in north Borneo through guerilla actions 73 74 Balikpapan Edit Main article Battle of Balikpapan 1945 The attention of the Allies then switched back to the central east coast with Oboe 2 The last major amphibious assault of World War II was at Balikpapan on 1 July 1945 75 The landing was preceded by a heavy aerial bombardment over the course of 20 days while minesweepers worked to clear the area for 15 days 76 establishing safe lanes for the invasion fleet to pass and clearing proposed anchorages These operations were undertaken inside the range of Japanese coastal guns to protect the minesweepers naval gunfire and aerial bombardment was used to suppress and neutralise the Japanese guns Due to the unavailability of the Tarakan airfield air support for the operation was provided by RAAF and US units based in the southern Philippines 77 Three minesweepers were lost during the clearance operations 78 Members of the 7th Division at Balikpapan The invasion fleet sailed from Morotai Island on 26 June arriving off Balikpapan on 29 June The landing area was then subjected to over 45 000 rounds of preparatory fire from the Australian US and Dutch warships supporting the landing 76 A deception plan was enacted to draw Japanese attention towards Manggar with the Australians undertaking pre landing operations and spreading disinformation 79 US underwater demolition teams cleared obstacles along the landing beach as well as off Manggar as part of the deception plan 78 For the landing operation a total of 33 000 personnel were assigned 21 000 of which were from the Australian 7th Division under the command of Major General Edward Milford 80 This formation consisted of three brigades the 18th 21st and 25th fighting together as a formation for the first time during the war Three beaches were chosen for the landing on the southern coast between Klandasan in the east and Stalkoedo in the west 81 the initial assault was undertaken by three infantry battalions the 2 10th on the extreme left the 2 12th in the centre and the 2 27th Battalion on the right 82 The troops were landed at the wrong location as smoke from the pre landing bombardment made navigation difficult 83 78 but the landing was unopposed and a beachhead was quickly established as follow on forces arrived 82 Operating on the left the 18th Brigade fought to capture several high features around Klandasan and to gain control of the town and secure the harbour and port facilities in Balikpapan north west of the landing beaches while the 21st Brigade landed on the right tasked with advancing east towards several Japanese airfields at Sepinggang and Manggar along the main coastal road The 25th Brigade was held in reserve but after landing on 2 July pushed inland towards Batuchampar 10 miles 16 km from the initial landing site 80 Balikpapan town and the port were captured on 3 July but mopping up continued into 4 July 82 Along the coast the 21st Brigade crossed the Batakan Ketjil River where it was held up on 3 July by strong Japanese resistance which was overcome with naval gunfire support The following day after crossing the Manggar Besar the brigade came up against even stronger Japanese opposition supported by coastal artillery and mortars defending the airfield despite landing tanks around the river the Australians were held up for several more days until some of the guns were captured and heavy air strikes overwhelmed the defenders 80 84 Meanwhile on 5 July one of the 18th Brigade s infantry battalions the 2 9th along with the 2 1st Pioneer Battalion 85 was landed at Panadjam to clear the western shore of Japanese artillery prior to the Allies opening the port Against only limited opposition the area around Panadjam was cleared within two days Meanwhile the airfields were secured by 9 July but Japanese resistance was strong utilising delaying tactics including booby traps mines sniping and small scale raids Strong resistance was met around Batuchampar where a Japanese battalion had established a stronghold while others fought resolutely in tunnels around Manggar 86 87 Australian engineers were heavily tasked working to clear over 8 000 mines and booby traps as well as destroying over 100 tunnels 78 Once Manggar airfield was secured the 21st Brigade continued their advance towards Sambodja 85 Moving inland along a north east road dubbed the Milford Highway by the Australians the 25th Brigade advanced to contact with the Japanese rearguard which was reduced with artillery support and then outflanked triggering a withdrawal to a secondary position 3 miles 4 8 km back on 9 July Air strikes and artillery helped reduce this position while infantry worked to surround the position this was not fully achieved and by the evening of 21 22 July the remaining defenders withdrew further inland 84 Opposition in these areas was largely overcome by the end of July but mopping up operations around Balikpapan continued until the end of the war in August as Japanese troops withdrew to the rough high ground further inland 86 87 Operations to secure Balikpapan cost the Australians 229 killed and 634 wounded while Japanese losses were placed at 2 032 killed A further 63 were captured 88 Aftermath Edit Part of the Labuan War Cemetery in 2011 In the aftermath of the campaign Australian personnel remained in Borneo until late 1945 to restore civilian administration oversee reconstruction efforts supervising the surrender of Japanese troops and liberating former Allied prisoners of war held in camps around Borneo 89 It has been claimed that Australian forces near Beaufort encouraged local fighters to massacre surrendered Japanese troops after the war in revenge for the Sandakan Death Marches with almost 6 000 Japanese being killed The historian Ooi Keat Gin states though that no documentary evidence supports these claims 90 The amphibious operations undertaken by Australian forces throughout the Borneo campaign were according to the historian Eustace Keogh the outstanding feature of the campaign and represented the largest such operations that the Australians undertook during the war They required vast amounts of naval and air support as well as complex planning and co operation between air land and naval forces from several nations A significant amount of time and resources were invested prior to the operation to train the forces assigned 91 The historian Peter Dennis assesses that the operations were of doubtful value strategically but they were skillfully conducted 16 Casualties during the campaign on the Allied side amounted to about 2 100 3 while the Japanese suffered about 4 700 casualties 4 A considerable number of civilians were killed or wounded for instance the pre invasion bombardment of Tarakan resulted in least 100 civilian casualties 92 Despite the success of the Allied landings because of the strategic situation the Borneo campaign was criticised in Australia at the time and in subsequent years as pointless or a waste of the lives of soldiers 93 especially following the first operation in Tarakan 94 In assessing the necessity of the campaign historians such as Max Hastings have said that attacking these forces already cut off from Japan was a waste of resources According to Hastings Any rational strategic judgment would have left them to their own devices screened by token allied forces until their nation s defeat enforced their surrender 95 It has been argued that the campaign did however achieve a number of objectives such as increasing the isolation of significant Japanese forces occupying the main part of the NEI capturing major oil supplies and freeing Allied prisoners of war who were being held in increasingly worse conditions in the Sandakan camp and Batu Lintang camp 96 97 Notes Edit A Japanese army of World War II was equivalent to an Allied corps and usually commanded between two and four divisions 36 Footnotes Edit a b Ooi 2010 p 204 Dean 2018 a b Australian War Memorial London a b Bōei Kenshujo 1966 a b c Kirby 2004 p 221 Shindo 2016 p 67 Costello 2009 pp 166 189 Costello 2009 p 216 Advocate 7 December 1946 p 1 Shindo 2016 pp 67 68 Long 1963 p 454 Ooi 2011 p 86 Hastings amp Stanley 2016 pp 218 279 Hastings amp Stanley 2016 p 279 Sandler 2001 p 180 a b c Dennis 1995 p 111 Keogh 1965 p 444 Keogh 1965 pp 429 430 Dennis 1995 pp 109 111 Horner 2016 pp 16 18 21 Keogh 1965 pp 432 433 a b Converse 2011 p 17 Long 1963 p 49 Horner 2016 pp 21 23 a b Ooi 2002 Shindo 2016 pp 68 70 a b Shindo 2016 p 71 a b Shindo 2016 p 72 Keogh 1965 p 433 Hoyt 1989 pp 191 198 Dennis 1995 p 113 a b Keogh 1965 p 438 Costello 2009 p 573 Coulthard Clark 1998 pp 251 254 Crawley 2014 p 33 Rottman 2005 p 23 Bullard 2016 p 43 a b c Keogh 1965 p 434 Shindo 2016 p 70 Ness 2014 pp 187 190 209 Shindo 2016 pp 71 73 Coulthard Clark 2001 p 251 a b Hoehn 2011 p 71 Long 1973 pp 447 448 Stanley 1997 p 42 Keogh 1965 pp 438 439 MacArthur 1994 pp 373 374 Coulthard Clark 1998 pp 251 252 Dennis 1995 pp 111 112 a b c d Coulthard Clark 2001 p 252 Long 1973 p 453 Long 1963 p 458 Long 1973 p 454 Coulthard Clark 1998 p 252 Coulthard Clark 2001 p 253 Long 1973 pp 459 461 Long 1963 p 473 Long 1973 pp 458 459 Long 1963 p 475 Coulthard Clark 1998 pp 252 253 Ministry of Defence 1995 p 175 a b Coulthard Clark 1998 p 253 MacArthur 1994 p 379 MacArthur 1994 pp 378 379 Long 1973 p 459 Long 1963 p 483 Long 1973 p 461 Pratten 2016a pp 307 308 Pratten 2016a p 307 Pratten 2016a p 308 Truscott 2000 p 20 a b Pratten 2016a p 309 a b Dennis 1995 p 114 Pratten 2016a p 310 Pfennigwerth 2009 p 166 a b MacArthur 1994 pp 379 380 Keogh 1965 pp 458 459 a b c d Dennis 1995 p 115 Keogh 1965 p 459 a b c Coulthard Clark 1998 p 254 Keogh 1965 pp 456 457 a b c Keogh 1965 p 462 Pratten 2016b p 328 a b Keogh 1965 p 463 a b McKenzie Smith 2018 p 2089 a b Dennis 1995 pp 114 116 a b Coulthard Clark 1998 pp 254 255 Long 1963 p 545 Long 1963 pp 496 561 563 Ooi 2011 pp 137 138 Keogh 1965 pp 463 464 Hastings amp Stanley 2016 p 281 Grey 2008 p 190 Hastings Hastings 2007 p 368 Tanaka 2017 p 27 Mikaberidze 2018 p 27 References EditAustralian War Memorial London Borneo The End in the Pacific 1945 The Battle in Brief Australian War Memorial London Retrieved 4 October 2019 Bōei Kenshujo 1966 戦史叢書 Senshi Sōsho War History Series in Japanese Vol 60 Asagumo Shimbunsha OCLC 297764445 Bullard Steven 2016 Chapter 2 The Emperor s Army Military Operations and Ideology in the War Against Australia In Fitzpatrick Georgina McCormack Timothy L H Morris Narrelle eds Australia s War Crimes Trials 1945 51 Leiden The Netherlands Brill Nijhoff pp 27 60 ISBN 978 90 04 29205 5 Costello John 2009 1981 The Pacific War 1941 1945 New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 68 801620 3 Coulthard Clark Chris 1998 Where Australians Fought The Encyclopaedia of Australia s Battles St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86448 611 2 Coulthard Clark Chris 2001 The Encyclopaedia of Australia s Battles St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 865086347 Converse Allan 2011 Armies of Empire The 9th Australian and 50th British Divisions in Battle 1939 1945 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 19480 8 Crawley Rhys 2014 Sustaining Amphibious Operations in the Asia Pacific Logistic Lessons for Australia 1914 2014 PDF Australian Defence Force Journal 28 39 ISSN 1320 2545 Dean Peter J 2018 MacArthur s Coalition US and Australian Operations in the Southwest Pacific Area 1942 1945 Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 2604 5 Dennis Peter 1995 The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 553227 9 Grey Jeffrey 2008 A Military History of Australia 3rd ed Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 69791 0 Hastings Max 2007 Nemesis The Battle for Japan 1944 45 London HarperPress ISBN 978 0 00 726816 0 Hastings Tony A Wasted Effort The RAAF and the Battle for Tarakan Part 1 Military History amp Heritage Victoria Retrieved 20 October 2019 Hastings Tony Stanley Peter 2016 To capture Tarakan Was Operation Oboe 1 Unnecessary In Dean Peter J ed Australia 1944 45 Port Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press pp 278 297 ISBN 978 1 10708 346 2 Hoehn John 2011 Commando Kayak Zurich Switzerland Hirsch Publishing ISBN 978 3 033 01717 7 Horner David 2016 Advancing Australia s National Interests Deciding Australia s War Strategy 1944 45 In Dean Peter J ed Australia 1944 45 Victory in the Pacific Port Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press pp 9 27 ISBN 978 1 107 08346 2 Hoyt Edwin P 1989 MacArthur s Navy The Seventh Fleet and the Battle for the Philippines New York New York Orion Books ISBN 978 0 517 56769 2 OCLC 19520893 Keogh Eustace 1965 The South West Pacific 1941 45 Melbourne Victoria Grayflower Productions OCLC 7185705 Kirby S Woodburn 2004 1957 The War Against Japan Volume I The Loss of Singapore History of the Second World War Uckfield United Kingdom The Naval amp Military Press ISBN 9781845740603 Long Gavin Merrick 1963 The Final Campaigns Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 1 Army Vol VII Canberra Australian War Memorial OCLC 464094764 Long Gavin 1973 The Six Years War Australia in the 1939 45 War Canberra Australian War Memorial and the Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 642 99375 0 MacArthur Douglas ed 1994 1966 The Campaigns of MacArthur in the Pacific Reports of General MacArthur Vol 1 Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 1020898977 Massacre at Balikpapan Advocate Burnie Tasmania 7 December 1946 p 1 via Trove McKenzie Smith Graham 2018 The Unit Guide The Australian Army 1939 1945 Volume 2 Warriewood New South Wales Big Sky Publishing ISBN 978 1 925675 146 Mikaberidze Alexander 2018 Behind Barbed Wire An Encyclopedia of Concentration and Prisoner of War Camps Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 4408 5762 1 Ministry of Defence 1995 War with Japan The Advance to Japan H M Stationery Office ISBN 978 0 11 772821 9 Ness Leland S 2014 Rikugun Guide to Japanese Ground Forces 1937 1945 Volume 1 Tactical Organization of Imperial Japanese Army amp Navy Ground Forces Solihull United Kingdom Helion ISBN 9781909982000 Ooi Keat Gin 2010 The Japanese Occupation of Borneo 1941 45 Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 96309 4 Ooi Keat Gin 2011 The Japanese Occupation of Borneo 1941 45 Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 45663 0 Ooi Keat Gin 2002 Prelude to Invasion Covert Operations Before the Re occupation of Northwest Borneo 1944 45 Journal of the Australian War Memorial Canberra Australian War Memorial 37 ISSN 1327 0141 Retrieved 2 November 2014 Pfennigwerth Ian 2009 Royal Australian Navy amp MacArthur Rosenberg Publishing ISBN 978 1 922013 21 7 Pratten Garth 2016a Unique in the History of the AIF Operations in British Borneo In Dean Peter J ed Australia 1944 45 Victory in the Pacific Port Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press pp 298 319 ISBN 978 1 107 08346 2 Pratten Garth 2016b Calling the Tune Australian and Allied Operations at Balikpapan In Dean Peter J ed Australia 1944 45 Victory in the Pacific Port Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press pp 320 340 ISBN 978 1 107 08346 2 Rottman Gordon L 2005 Japanese Army in World War II Conquest of the Pacific 1941 42 Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 1 84176 789 5 Sandler Stanley 2001 World War II in the Pacific An Encyclopedia London Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 8153 1883 5 Shindo Hiroyuki 2016 Holding on to the Finish The Japanese Army in the South and South West Pacific 1944 45 In Dean Peter J ed Australia 1944 45 Victory in the Pacific Port Melbourne Victoria Cambridge University Press pp 51 76 ISBN 978 1 107 08346 2 Stanley Peter 1997 Tarakan An Australian Tragedy Sydney Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86448 278 8 Tanaka Yuki 2017 Hidden Horrors Japanese War Crimes in World War II Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 1 5381 0270 1 Truscott Jim 2000 Voices from Borneo The Japanese War PDF Army Journal The Professional Journal of the Australian Army 13 23 OCLC 173394492 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Borneo campaign 1945 Last Battles The Landings WW2 Australia Borneo campaign at AWM London Borneo Campaign at WW2 Database Pratten Garth 21 October 2019 Naik Sungai The river war in Borneo Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs Australian National University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Borneo campaign amp oldid 1144148884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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